You probably thought the Internet had finally grown tired of mocking the now infamous botched restoration of a 200-year-old Spanish fresco depicting Jesus. Except, not really, because the restored version is so profoundly ridiculous that it’s still ripe for satire.

Enter the Cecilia Prize, named for Cecilia Gimenez, the well-intentioned Spanish octogenarian responsible for the disfigured painting. After Gimenez noticed that the fresco in the Santuario de la Misericordia, a church in the northeastern Spanish city of Borja, had become a bit shabby over the years she decided to intervene. The new interactive website explains:

The Cecilia Prize for amateur restoration has been created in honor of all the fixers out there. Tweet your entry with #ceciliaprize for your chance to win a poster of the restored Ecce Homo, the painting by the now world-famous Cecilia Gimenez.

The contest has already yielded plenty of results — several of which are truly genius. Not feeling up to the challenge of creating your own? You can still browse the gallery, powered by Pinterest. Here are a few of NewsFeed’s favorite entries:

To begin with, this is not an attempt to show a disrespect to Jesus - the whole thing is supposed to satirize do-gooders who often miscalculate their own skill and do more harm then good.

Now let me explain, why this is not sacrilegious.

Firstly, the First Commandment explicitly prohibits worshiping an image of the God as opposed to the God.

Secondly, Jesus is probably one of the most portrayed person in the world. Guess what happens with 99% of his depictions? They end up in a landfill. Yes, in a landfill, laying right there, between rotten fish and rotten vegetables.

If this is not sacrilegious, then the "mock botched job" contest definitely isn't too.